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Tony Connelly

    Tony Connelly je oceňovaný novinář a autor známý svým hlubokým vhledem do evropských záležitostí. Jeho rozsáhlé zkušenosti v evropské politice a mezinárodních vztazích formují jeho psaní, které se ponoří do složitosti evropských stereotypů a identity. Connellyho styl je pronikavý a analytický, přičemž čtenářům nabízí bystrý pohled na to, jak se evropské národy navzájem vnímají a jak tato vnímání ovlivňují jejich vztahy. Jeho díla jsou cenným zdrojem pro pochopení současné Evropy.

    Brexit and Ireland
    Don't Mention the Wars
    • Don't Mention the Wars

      A Journey through European Stereotypes

      • 385 stránek
      • 14 hodin čtení
      3,0(1)Ohodnotit

      RTÉ’s Tony Connelly has produced an intriguing, thought-provoking, hilarious and sometimes poignant grand tour through European stereotypes. From the bailouts to the Euro-crisis, from the rise of Frau Merkel to the dalliances of the French presidents, Connelly does a brilliant job skewering the lies and truths of European stereotypes. A lot has happened in the nearly five years since Tony Connelly published the first edition of Don’t Mention the Wars to great acclaim. In this revised and updated edition, Connelly revisits every chapter and explores the news and the rich parade of events that have happened in that time.

      Don't Mention the Wars
    • Brexit and Ireland

      • 365 stránek
      • 13 hodin čtení

      When the citizens of the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, they delivered a profound shock to its nearest neighbour: Ireland. Brexit represents potentially the single greatest foreign-policy and economic challenge to the Irish state since the Second World War. More than any other journalist, RTE's long-time Brussels correspondent Tony Connelly has been helping the public make sense of the implications of Brexit for Ireland. Now, in 'Brexit and Ireland', he tells the inside story of the Irish response and explores the many ways in which this political and economic earthquake is likely to play out.

      Brexit and Ireland